Answer:
Technically yes, because people weren't allowed to own slaves and it was enforced by the law, legally speaking. However, the thirteenth amendment did not abolish racism and did not necessarily make african americans equal to Caucasian men and women. It is a problem we still deal with in today's society.
Explanation:
1. Ceasar Agustus
2. Ceasar Tiberius
3. Ceasar Caligula
4. Ceasar Claudius
5. Ceasar Nero
6. And Ceasar Salad
lol, kidding... hope this is helpful!
Answer:
A: Workers could move freely between nations
Explanation:
it is the right answer If you think its wrong don't write it
Answer: The early years of the twentieth century were a time of movement for many black Americans. Traditionally, most blacks lived in the Southeastern states. But in the nineteen twenties, many blacks moved to cities in the North.
Black Americans moved because living conditions were so poor in the rural areas of the Southeast. But many of them discovered that life was also hard in the colder Northern cities. Jobs often were hard to find. Housing was poor. And whites sometimes acted brutally against them.
The life of black Americans forms a special piece of the history of the nineteen twenties. That will be our story today.
The years just before and after nineteen twenty were difficult for blacks. It was a time of racial hatred. Many whites joined the Ku Klux Klan organization. The Klan often terrorized blacks. Klan members sometimes burned fiery crosses in front of the houses of black families. And they sometimes beat and murdered blacks.
The Ku Klux Klan also acted against Roman Catholics, Jews.
Explanation: